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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, April 1999, p. 1627-1635, Vol. 65, No. 4
Institute of Biology, College of Natural
Sciences, Carleton University, Ottawa K1S 5B6, Canada
Received 29 June 1998/Accepted 15 January 1999
The frequency of isolation of three nonhomologous chlorobenzoate
catabolic genotypes (clc, cba, and
fcb) was determined for 464 isolates from freshwater
sediments and groundwater in the vicinity of the Hyde Park industrial
landfill site in the Niagara watershed. Samples were collected from
both contaminated and noncontaminated sites during spring, summer, and
fall and enriched at 4, 22, or 32°C with micromolar to millimolar
concentrations of chlorobenzoates and 3-chlorobiphenyl (M. C. Peel
and R. C. Wyndham, Microb. Ecol: 33:59-68, 1997). Hybridization
at moderate stringency to restriction-digested genomic DNA with DNA
probes revealed the chlorocatechol 1,2-dioxygenase operon
(clcABD), the 3-chlorobenzoate 3,4-(4,5)-dioxygenase operon (cbaABC), and the 4-chlorobenzoate dehalogenase
(fcbB) gene in isolates enriched from all contaminated
sites in the vicinity of the industrial landfill. Nevertheless, the
known genes were found in less than 10% of the isolates from the
contaminated sites, indicating a high level of genetic diversity in the
microbial community. The known genotypes were not enriched from the
noncontaminated control sites nearby. The clc,
cba, and fcb isolates were distributed across
five phenotypically distinct groups based on Biolog carbon source
utilization, with the breadth of the host range decreasing in the order
clc > cba > fcb. Restriction fragment length
polymorphism (RFLP) patterns showed that the cba genes were
conserved in all isolates whereas the clc and
fcb genes exhibited variation in RFLP patterns. These
observations are consistent with the recent spread of the
cba genes by horizontal transfer as part of transposon Tn5271 in response to contaminant exposure at Hyde Park.
Consistent with this hypothesis, IS1071, the flanking
element in Tn5271, was found in all isolates that carried
the cba genes. Interestingly, IS1071 was also
found in a high proportion of isolates from Hyde Park carrying the
clc and fcb genes, as well as in type strains carrying the clcABD operon and the biphenyl
(bph) catabolic genes.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Selection of clc, cba, and
fcb Chlorobenzoate-Catabolic Genotypes from Groundwater and
Surface Waters Adjacent to the Hyde Park, Niagara Falls, Chemical
Landfill
*
Corresponding author. Mailing address: Institute
of Biology, Carleton University, 1125 Colonel By Dr., Ottawa,
ON, Canada K1S 5B6. Phone: (613) 520-2600, ext. 3651. Fax: (613)
520-3539. E-mail: cwyndham{at}ccs.carleton.ca.
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